Syria and Jordan Protest Israeli Order

By Brandon Kaufman
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

DAMASCUS, Syria/ AMMAN, Jordan– On Tuesday, Syria chastised new Israeli military orders that they say paves the way for large-scale expulsions of Palestinians from the West Bank and warned that the new orders may lead to a policy of “ethnic cleansing” in the occupied territories.

The new rules, which took effect on Tuesday, allow for anyone caught in the West Bank without an Israeli permit to face immediate expulsion or be sentenced up to seven years in prison.  The order, if implemented in full force, could reach thousands of individuals who have moved to the West Bank, foreign born Palestinians married to West Bankers and foreigners who are in the West Bank on expired tourist visas.

A Syrian Foreign Ministry official said “this decision is the adoption of the ethnic cleansing policy and a step to the mass deportation aiming at emptying the land from its people.”  The official further commented “it also constitutes a flagrant violation of international law and human rights and will of the whole international community.”

Syria has not been the only country critical of the new order.  Jordan called in Israel’s ambassador for an official protest over the same decision considering the move to be “a flagrant violation of international law and conventions” and a violation of Israel’s obligations as the occupying power in the West Bank.

In response, a group of Israeli human rights organizations have asked Defense Minister Ehud Barak to rescind the order’s implementation, arguing that it would “turn all residents of the West Bank into criminals.”  The Israeli government rebutted such an assertion arguing that the order makes “no change with regard to who is illegal or legal.” Saeb Erakat, the chief Palestinian negotiator with Israel said “these orders have the effect of turning Palestinians into criminals in their own homes, while directly undermining the efforts of Palestinians to run their own internal affairs.”

An Israeli military official denied that the order would pave the way for large-scale expulsions, indicating that its sole purpose was aimed at foreign activists.

For more information, please see:

CNN- Jordan Protests to Israel Over Expulsions– 14 April 2010

Haaretz- Jordan Condemns Israel Over West Bank Deportation Order– 14 April 2010

The Jerusalem Post- Jordan Protests Expulsion Rule– 14 April 2010

Author: Impunity Watch Archive